WaldoBastian

RyanLortie

LennartPoettering

Introduction

Various specifications specify files and file formats. This
specification defines where these files should be looked for by
defining one or more base directories relative to which files
should be located.

Basics

The XDG Base Directory Specification is based on the following concepts:

There is a single base directory relative to which user-specific
data files should be written. This directory is defined by the
environment variable $XDG_DATA_HOME.

There is a single base directory relative to which user-specific
configuration files should be written. This directory is defined by the
environment variable $XDG_CONFIG_HOME.

There is a set of preference ordered base directories relative to
which data files should be searched. This set of directories is defined
by the environment variable $XDG_DATA_DIRS.

There is a set of preference ordered base directories relative to
which configuration files should be searched.
This set of directories is defined
by the environment variable $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS.

There is a single base directory relative to which user-specific
non-essential (cached) data should be written.
This directory is defined by the
environment variable $XDG_CACHE_HOME.

There is a single base directory relative to which
user-specific runtime files and other file objects should
be placed. This directory is defined by the environment
variable $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR.

All paths set in these environment variables must be
absolute. If an implementation encounters a relative path in any
of these variables it should consider the path invalid and ignore
it.

Environment variables

$XDG_DATA_HOME defines the base directory relative to
which user specific data files should be stored. If
$XDG_DATA_HOME is either not set or empty, a default equal to
$HOME/.local/share should be used.

$XDG_CONFIG_HOME defines the base directory relative to
which user specific configuration files should be stored. If
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME is either not set or empty, a default equal to
$HOME/.config should be used.

$XDG_DATA_DIRS defines the preference-ordered set of
base directories to search for data files in addition to the
$XDG_DATA_HOME base directory.
The directories in $XDG_DATA_DIRS should be seperated
with a colon ':'.

If $XDG_DATA_DIRS is either not set or empty, a value equal to
/usr/local/share/:/usr/share/ should be used.

$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS defines the preference-ordered set of
base directories to search for configuration files in addition to the
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME base directory.
The directories in $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS should be seperated
with a colon ':'.

If $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS is either not set or empty, a value equal to
/etc/xdg should be used.

The order of base directories denotes their importance; the first
directory listed is the most important. When the same information is
defined in multiple places the information defined relative to the more
important base directory takes precedent. The base directory defined
by $XDG_DATA_HOME is considered more important than
any of the base directories defined by $XDG_DATA_DIRS.
The base directory defined
by $XDG_CONFIG_HOME is considered more important than
any of the base directories defined by $XDG_CONFIG_DIRS.

$XDG_CACHE_HOME defines the base directory relative to
which user specific non-essential data files should be stored. If
$XDG_CACHE_HOME is either not set or empty, a default equal to
$HOME/.cache should be used.

$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR defines the base directory
relative to which user-specific non-essential runtime files and
other file objects (such as sockets, named pipes, ...) should be
stored. The directory MUST be owned by the user, and he MUST be
the only one having read and write access to it. Its Unix access
mode MUST be 0700.

The lifetime of the directory MUST be bound to the user being
logged in. It MUST be created when the user first logs in and if
the user fully logs out the directory MUST be removed. If the
user logs in more than once he should get pointed to the same
directory, and it is mandatory that the directory continues to
exist from his first login to his last logout on the system, and
not removed in between. Files in the directory MUST not survive
reboot or a full logout/login cycle.

The directory MUST be on a local file system and not shared with
any other system. The directory MUST by fully-featured by the
standards of the operating system. More specifically, on
Unix-like operating systems AF_UNIX sockets, symbolic links,
hard links, proper permissions, file locking, sparse files,
memory mapping, file change notifications, a reliable hard link
count must be supported, and no restrictions on the file name
character set should be imposed. Files in this directory MAY be
subjected to periodic clean-up. To ensure that your files are
not removed, they should have their access time timestamp
modified at least once every 6 hours of monotonic time or the
'sticky' bit should be set on the file.

If $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is not set applications
should fall back to a replacement directory with similar
capabilities and print a warning message. Applications should
use this directory for communication and synchronization
purposes and should not place larger files in it, since it might
reside in runtime memory and cannot necessarily be swapped out
to disk.

Referencing this specification

Other specifications may reference this specification by specifying the
location of a data file as
$XDG_DATA_DIRS/subdir/filename. This implies that:

Such file should be installed to $datadir/subdir/filename
with $datadir defaulting to /usr/share.

A user specific version of the data file may be created in
$XDG_DATA_HOME/subdir/filename, taking into
account the default value for $XDG_DATA_HOME if
$XDG_DATA_HOME is not set.

Lookups of the data file should search for ./subdir/filename relative to
all base directories specified by $XDG_DATA_HOME and
$XDG_DATA_DIRS . If an environment
variable is either not set or empty, its default value as defined by this specification
should be used instead.

Specifications may reference this specification by specifying the
location of a configuration file as
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS/subdir/filename. This implies that:

Default configuration files should be installed to $sysconfdir/xdg/subdir/filename
with $sysconfdir defaulting to /etc.

A user specific version of the configuration file may be created in
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/subdir/filename, taking into
account the default value for $XDG_CONFIG_HOME if
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME is not set.

Lookups of the configuration file should search for ./subdir/filename relative to
all base directories indicated by $XDG_CONFIG_HOME and
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS . If an environment
variable is either not set or empty, its default value as defined by this specification
should be used instead.

If, when attempting to write a file, the destination
directory is non-existant an attempt should be made to create it
with permission 0700. If the destination directory
exists already the permissions should not be changed.
The application should be prepared to handle the case where the file
could not be written, either because the directory was non-existant
and could not be created, or for any other reason. In such case it
may chose to present an error message to the user.

When attempting to read a file, if for any reason a file in a certain
directory is unaccessible, e.g. because the directory is non-existant,
the file is non-existant or the user is not authorized to open the file,
then the processing of the file in that directory should be skipped.
If due to this a required file could not be found at all, the
application may chose to present an error message to the user.

A specification that refers to $XDG_DATA_DIRS or
$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS should define what the behaviour
must be when a file is located under multiple base directories.
It could, for example, define that only the file under the most
important base directory should be used or, as another example,
it could define rules for merging the information from the different
files.